Hi,
Could be a bug? Would you please try replacing the 5's with 9's (if
I remember correctly 9 is the highest odd number indicating a
hyphenation point) and see if it gets hyphenated properly.
Also, you might want to check the standalone version of altlinuxhyph
that I posted since there are hyphenation rules about minimum length
of pieces in OOo both in the styles and at the document level that
sometimes interfere with that.
If not, then I would say we have a bug. Unfortunately, I was not the
author of that code and all I did was try to fix bugs and clean it up
a bit so that others could more easily use it. Luckily the code is
not that hard to follow so perhaps someone can track down why hard
coded strings like that are not being properly detected and used.
Kevin
On Sep 16, 2005, at 5:51 PM, Daniel Naber wrote:
On Friday 16 September 2005 22:37, Kevin B. Hendricks wrote:
It means that the rule applies to only that word. This is how
"exceptions" to general rules can be implemented on a word by word
basis without creating general rules that make no sense.
I somehow cannot get that to work with altlinuxHyph. "beinahe" is
hyphenated "bein-a-he", but it should be "bei-na-he" (using the
hyph_de_DE.dic that comes with OOo). Adding ".bei5na5he." to that file
and the word won't be hyphenated at all anymore. What might be the
problem?
regards
Daniel
--
http://www.danielnaber.de
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